Journal of Family Psychology
Volume 23, Issue 3, 2009, Pages 311-320

Authoritative Parenting Among Immigrant Chinese Mothers of Preschoolers (Article)

Cheah C.S.L.* , Leung C.Y.Y. , Tahseen M. , Schultz D.
  • a Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, United States
  • b Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, United States
  • c Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, United States
  • d Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, United States

Abstract

The goals of this study were: (a) to examine authoritative parenting style among Chinese immigrant mothers of young children, (b) to test the mediational mechanism between authoritative parenting style and children's outcomes; and (c) to evaluate 3 predictors of authoritative parenting style (psychological well-being, perceived support in the parenting role, parenting stress). Participants included 85 Chinese immigrant mothers and their preschool children. Mothers reported on their parenting style, psychological well-being, perceived parenting support and stress, and children's hyperactivity/attention. Teacher ratings of child adjustment were also obtained. Results revealed that Chinese immigrant mothers of preschoolers strongly endorsed the authoritative parenting style. Moreover, authoritative parenting predicted increased children's behavioral/attention regulation abilities (lower hyperactivity/inattention), which then predicted decreased teacher rated child difficulties. Finally, mothers with greater psychological well-being or parenting support engaged in more authoritative parenting, but only under conditions of low parenting stress. Neither well-being nor parenting support predicted authoritative parenting when parenting hassles were high. Findings were discussed in light of cultural- and immigration-related issues facing immigrant Chinese mothers of young children. © 2009 American Psychological Association.

Author Keywords

Chinese immigrants Social development Parenting

Index Keywords

perception China psychological aspect human statistics Stress, Psychological mental stress Adaptation, Psychological social support child behavior ethnology United States Humans Emigrants and Immigrants preschool child female Child, Preschool Child Rearing adaptive behavior Mothers Parenting Article mother adult migration Authoritarianism authority child parent relation

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-67650128633&doi=10.1037%2fa0015076&partnerID=40&md5=69785be50b00ba137dad9c16733ba845

DOI: 10.1037/a0015076
ISSN: 08933200
Cited by: 65
Original Language: English